9-yr-old housemaid set ablaze by mistress.

She was on fire from head to toe. She ran out of the house
screaming, ‘Madam has killed me’ –Eyewitness
It is not likely that nine-year-old Eno Bassey has heard
the word ‘trafficking’ before. She was not even educated past primary one when,
two months ago, a woman came to her mother’s house in Calabar, Cross River
State and asked that she should be allowed to go live with her in Lagos.
Going to Lagos would have been a dream-come-true for Eno.
In May 2013, after discussing with Eno’s mother, she left
with Mrs. Nkeze Iroakazi, the fair looking ‘Madam’, who promised Eno’s mother
she would be enrolled in school as soon as they got to Lagos.
But before they took off for the Centre of Excellence,
where Eno thought her life would be turned around, they made a detour and
picked up another girl, 13-year-old Happiness Bassey, in another part of
Calabar. They bear the same surname but are not related.
On Monday July 29, 2013, our correspondent visited the
Burns Unit of the Gbagada General Hospital, Lagos, where little Eno had been
rushed to, two days earlier, after her ‘Madam’ allegedly doused her with
kerosene from head to toe and set her alight.
The screams emanating from the girl’s throat seemed to
strike everyone in the ward with a sharpness that reflected the girl’s pain.
“Water! Water! Water! Please! Please! Please!” the heavily
bandaged girl screamed after a barrage of pleading in her native Ibibio
language got no response.
Eno’s body was heavily bandaged from her neck down to the
toes.
The only part of her body that did not seem to have been
damaged much was her face, the top of her head and neck.
“She sustained 95 per cent third degree burns,” a medical
personnel, who was one of those in charge of Eno, said.
As the girl screamed in agony, asking the nurses to give
her water, some relations of other patients in the ward, who could not
withstand the scream of agony, dabbed at their eyes as they hastily left the
ward.
Eno could not lay her badly burnt and bandaged body on the
bed. She dragged herself off the bed.
“Stay, please stay on the bed,” a nurse told her, but Eno
dragged herself off the bed, fell to the floor and let out another scream.
As she crawled agonisingly as if in a trance, our
correspondent realized she was reaching for a wash basin in a corner of the
ward to get water.
But four nurses rushed in before the girl could move much
and momentarily considered how to pick her up from the floor without hurting
her.
A nurse handed our correspondent a glove. “Please, you can
help too,” she said.
But as Eno was carried back to the bed, she let out another
scream. It was evident that every part of her body was hurting her.
Beside the bed, Happiness sat on a chair. She could not
help crying as she looked at the bandaged figure of her friend of two months.
She dabbed at her eyes.
A moment later, a consultant specialist, Dr. Idowu
Fadeyibi, of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital walked in. He is an
Associate Professor of Burns and Plastics.
He said the restless behaviour of Eno was owing to the fact
that she was severely in pain and dehydrated.
Fadeyibi directed that the girl be given some analgesics
intravenously and given little quantity of water gradually.
As this went on, the victim seemed to become calm, our
correspondent summoned Happiness for a conversation.
Fright was clearly written on the girl’s face. She could
have met the same fate, she probably thought.
“Did you see when Eno was set ablaze?” our correspondent
asked her.
“No, I did not see. I was inside the house doing some
chores. I heard when Madam was beating her. She was crying then. But later, I
went outside and saw her burning and shouting,” she said.
She narrated how they came to be house-helps in Iroakazi’s
house.
Happiness said, “I stopped schooling in primary four. Two
months ago, Madam came to our house and told my mother that I should follow her
to Lagos and that she would put me in school.
“I came to Lagos with Eno from Calabar. Madam
said she would put us in school but we have not attended any school since we
got to Lagos.
“Madam beats us all the time, especially if she asks us to
do something and she says we are too slow on it. She wakes us up by 5am and we
are only allowed to sleep by 12 midnight.”
Our correspondent asked what kind of work the two girls did
in the house.
“When we wake up, we sweep the house, mop the whole house
and wash madam’s clothes. We wash that of Aunty Ijeoma (Iroakazi’s daughter)
too,” she said.
Happiness looked at her feet as she spoke. She seemed to be
scared. With assurances that nobody would hurt her, our correspondent asked
again if she saw when Eno was doused with kerosene and lit on fire.
She fell silent and looked at her toes.
“Did they tell you to say you did not see anything?” our
correspondent asked her. She nodded.
Happiness however did not say who told her to lie about
what she saw.
The girl did not know her mother’s phone number. She said
‘Madam’ was the one who contacts her mum.
Officials of the Lagos State Ministry of Women Affairs and
Poverty Alleviation later came to take Happiness away. She has since been put
in the care of the Child Transit Home, Idi Araba, Lagos pending the time her
parents could be notified.
An official of the ministry said efforts were still being
made to contact the families of the two girls.
A medical personnel at the hospital, who did not want her
name in print because she was not authorised to speak on record, said the 95
per cent burn sustained by Eno puts her survival in the balance.
“Dr (Fadeyibi) is a specialist in burns and will definitely
do all that is humanly possible but her survival is still in the hand of God.
All the parts of her body including her private part are severely burnt,” she
said.
On Tuesday, our correspondent went to the No 7,
Adeniran Ogunsanya, Surulere, home of Iroakazi, where the attack on
the house-help allegedly took place.
The storey building has some stores in the front but an
attendant in one of the stores said the residents live behind.
When our correspondent asked for the Iroakazi’s family, the
young lady said none of the occupants of the apartments behind the house were
at home.
The lady would not offer any answer to inquiries as she was
obviously cautious of speaking about the incident.
Another resident of the area, a security man, who witnessed
the incident later gave a chilling narration of what happened the day the
incident occurred.
He said, “The girl suddenly ran out of the compound, she
was on fire from head to toe. She was screaming as she ran to the front of the
house, screaming ‘Madam has killed me! Yeeeeh! Yeeeeh!’ A man who was driving
stopped and quickly took a fire extinguisher from his car and sprayed the girl.
She would have died on the spot if not for that man.
“That was when we learnt that she poured kerosene on her
before lighting her on fire. People around here would have lynched that woman
because everybody was so angry.
“Someone quickly notified the police and they came to
arrest the woman. It was also sympathisers who rushed the girl to the
hospital.”
Our correspondent later went to the Bode Thomas Police
Division, Surulere, where Iroakazi was being detained.
Officials of the Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty
Alleviation, who were at the police station also asked Iroakazi why she
attacked little Eno in such a violent way.
“I did not attack her. I was inside when I heard her
screaming. I went out and saw her burning,” she simply said.
The Divisional Police Officer of the station declined vehemently
to allow her photo to be taken.
“You have to go and take permission from the Area Commander
at Iponri to take her photograph,” he said.
The police also did not give any personal information about
the suspect.
The fair complexioned woman seemed to be in her early 50s.
Our correspondent learnt that she is an indigene of Delta State.
Founder of the Esther Child Rights Foundation, who notified
WAPA about the case, said all necessary avenues to ensure justice on behalf of
Eno would be explored.
She said, “This is not just a case of attempted murder. I
have been to the office of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic
in Persons and Other Related Matters. This is equally a case of child
trafficking.
“We will not relent in our efforts to ensure that what
exactly happened to that little girl comes to light.
“Since I have been dealing with cases involving children, I
have never seen one this brutal. What could make a sane human being do that to
a little girl?”
Zonal Commander, NAPTIP, Mr. Joseph Famakin, said WAPA is
its partner on child trafficking issue.
He said, “We will work with the ministry on the case. The
first thing that needs to be done is to determine the status of the girls to
see if they could be categorised as victims of trafficking. When we have all
the information, we and WAPA will take immediate step on the children.
“Also, the police are our partners on this issue and I
believe they will take appropriate action and get us involved where necessary.”
He said contrary to views that girls are mostly trafficked
to Lagos from places such as Calabar and Akwa Ibom, the menace of trafficking
had become widespread.
“Gone are those days when we have some parts of Nigeria
termed as endemic areas in the country as far as trafficking is concerned. The
problem now cut across many states at the moment,” he said.
Spokesperson of the state police command, Ngozi Braide,
said she had not got a report of the case, when our correspondent spoke with
her on the phone.
“I will find out about the case and where it stands and get
back to you,” she said.
Trafficking of children for domestic labour with its
attendant violence has become rampant in Nigeria.
The 2013 Trafficking in Persons Report published by the
United States Department of State, says, “Trafficked Nigerians are recruited
from rural and, to a lesser extent, urban areas within the country, women and
girls, for domestic servitude.
“Nigerian traffickers rely on threats of voodoo curses to
control their victims and force them into situations of prostitution and
labour.”
The report states that at least 25 traffickers were
convicted within the past one year, while as at the end of 2012, 143
prosecutions remained pending with NAPTIP.
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